And YES! it is finished. My slightly smaller -due to wrong scaling 80 cm span- Yak is ready to fly. It came out 128 gr, not too bad for my first 3D indoor plane I guess.
We have (when was the last day we didn't?) strong winds now so I only hovered the plane in the living room. It does hover at 3/4 throttle, so there must be enough power to try my hands on this type of plane.

Thanks for the plans, I will report on the first real flights (if any)

Finally I got to maiden my too small Yak today. It only had my homebrew CD rom motor and I didn't find the time to fit the shrouds, but it did fly excellent. I don't have anything to compare it with, but as I see it this thing flies beautiful. It can do anything I can come up with, and I guess a lot more.

Thanks for the plans and the help in here. I'll try a Blingbling next and put better magnets in my motor.

Finally I got to maiden my too small Yak today. It only had my homebrew CD rom motor and I didn't find the time to fit the shrouds, but it did fly excellent. I don't have anything to compare it with, but as I see it this thing flies beautiful. It can do anything I can come up with, and I guess a lot more.

Thanks for the plans and the help in here. I'll try a Blingbling next and put better magnets in my motor.

Cool! This might be the way for me because I'm flying outside as well. The higher wingloading should be an advantage. A bit less deflection and I think I'll have a very nice fun plane. I guess I could get near to 110 grams or so (2S). The large Yak already does vertical with authority so the small one will be even better. Need a bit more prop speed though, so I'll have to try.